Highlights
- China Minmetals convenes 2025 conference to reinforce national strategy of resource security and global mineral control
- State-owned enterprise plans full industry chain integration and aggressive overseas mining asset acquisition
- Conference signals Beijing's coordinated approach to securing critical minerals for economic and technological advancement
China Minmetals, (opens in a new tab) one of the worldโs largest state-owned mining conglomerates, convened its 2025 Mineral Resources Work Conference on August 8, outlining an ambitious strategy to tighten control of global mineral supply chains.
Party Secretary and Chairman Chen Dexin led the session, emphasizing alignment with President Xi Jinpingโs directives on resource security. President Zhu Kebing (opens in a new tab) presided, with top leadership and directors present. The tone was unmistakable: China Minmetals is doubling down on its role as the nationโs โprimary resource championโ during the **15th Five-Year Plan (2026โ2030)**โwhat executives are calling a โgolden eraโ for resource expansion.

Key Themes
- Resource Security as National Strategy โ The conference framed mineral supply as central to Chinaโs economic and security posture. Leadership stressed urgency in consolidating and expanding Chinaโs control over metals and minerals.
- Full Industry Chain Integration โ Plans include tighter coordination across exploration, mining, processing, and downstream manufacturing, ensuring China captures value at every stage.
- Global Resource Acquisition โ Executives called for โexpanding channelsโ for new mining projects abroad, underscoring Beijingโs drive to secure overseas assets amid escalating global competition.
- Talent and Standards Push โ China Minmetals pledged new group-wide standards for mine management and accelerated training pipelines to build a unified workforce for the mining sector.
Why It Matters for the West
For U.S. and allied policymakers, the conference offers a blunt reminder: China sees minerals not just as commodities, but as strategic levers. While Washington just starts to debate the merits of industrial policy, Beijing is executing long-range plans with clear state backing.
President Zhu Kebing

The implications are immediate:
- China Minmetals will likely be more aggressive in competing for global mining concessions, from Africa to South America.
- Integrated strategies mean Beijing isnโt just mining raw materialsโit is embedding control from pit to product, raising barriers for Western supply chain independence.
- With the U.S. still struggling to fund domestic mining projects and refine permitting, the timing of Chinaโs โgolden eraโ could cement an enduring lead in critical resources essential for clean energy, semiconductors, and defense.
Bottom Line
China Minmetalsโ 2025 conference highlights how resource nationalism and industrial strategy are inseparable in Beijingโs playbook. For Western stakeholdersโwhether in government, industry, or investmentโthe signal is clear: the worldโs second-largest economy is mobilizing state power to secure mineral dominance. The Westโs challenge will be whether it can respond with equal coordination and speed.
Profile
China Minmetals, a state-owned enterprise founded in 1950 and directly overseen by Chinaโs central government, has grown into a Fortune Global 500 powerhouse with assets exceeding RMB 1.3 trillion and 2024 revenues topping RMB 833.2 billion. Operating nine publicly listed companies across Shanghai and Hong Kong, Minmetals has transformed from a trading house into a vertically integrated global mining and metals giant through decades of restructuring, most notably its 2015 merger with China Metallurgical Group (MCC).
Today, its portfolio spans metals and minerals, steel engineering, logistics, finance, and real estate, with operations in 43 mines worldwide, including major assets in Peru, Australia, and Papua New Guinea. Its mineral holdings cover over 70% of Chinaโs Strategic Non-Energy Mineral Catalogue, with world-leading reserves in tungsten, graphite, bismuth, and strong positions in nickel, lithium, zinc, and potash. Beyond mining, Minmetals is a central force in Chinaโs steel construction, bulk raw material trade, and industrial finance, while its R&D footprint includes 19 research institutes, 48 national labs, and 61,000 active patents. With Xi Jinpingโs directives shaping its path, Minmetalsโ stated mission is to ensure resource security and global competitiveness in miningโpositioning itself not only as Chinaโs industrial backbone but also as a strategic player in the global minerals race.
China Minmetals Rare Earth is now part of the larger state-owned conglomerate, the China Rare Earth Group, formed in 2021 by merging several of China's major rare earth enterprises, including Minmetals Rare Earth Co., Chinalco Rare Earth & Metals Co., and China Southern Rare Earth Group.ย This consolidation creates a single dominant entity in the global rare earth industry, consolidating China's strategic position and control over the market.
Source: China Minmetals Corporation, August 22, 2025
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